With the SAS: Across the Rhine: Into the Heart of Hitler's Third Reich
With the SAS: Across the Rhine is the story of the latter part of Captain Ian Wellsted’s military career with the Special Air Service, the first part of which was detailed in his well-received SAS: With the Maquis. This is a very personal account, revealing the many emotional as well as physical strains placed upon men in the fighting line.

The author takes us back to his time employed with the 79th armored Division (the famous ‘Hobart’s Funnies’) preparing for D-Day and his desire for more exciting action, which led first to the Parachute Regiment and then the SAS. Whilst we learn a little of his time with the maquis, the main focus of the story is his part in Operation Archway. A British special forces mission which involved the 1st and 2nd Special Air Service Regiments acting in support of the advance of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery's Allied 21st Army Group in operations Varsity and Plunder, this crossing of the Rhine was one of the largest and most diverse operations ever carried out by the SAS.

In this offensive, the SAS teams were thrust deep into German territory, often having to battle their way through the enemy lines to get back to safety. ‘I quickly learned that there was no way to control an SAS battle,’ Wellsted wrote of his first major encounter in charge of a patrol. ‘The din was deafening – seventy odd Vickers and half a dozen Brownings all chattering together. The screech of ricochets and the fire of the enemy made my voice sound like the squeak of a mouse against a church organ. I was helpless.’

In one of these encounters, as the war was drawing to a close, Wellsted’s troop found itself surrounded. In the ensuing firefight, Wellsted was wounded, bringing his active front line career to an end.
1129348336
With the SAS: Across the Rhine: Into the Heart of Hitler's Third Reich
With the SAS: Across the Rhine is the story of the latter part of Captain Ian Wellsted’s military career with the Special Air Service, the first part of which was detailed in his well-received SAS: With the Maquis. This is a very personal account, revealing the many emotional as well as physical strains placed upon men in the fighting line.

The author takes us back to his time employed with the 79th armored Division (the famous ‘Hobart’s Funnies’) preparing for D-Day and his desire for more exciting action, which led first to the Parachute Regiment and then the SAS. Whilst we learn a little of his time with the maquis, the main focus of the story is his part in Operation Archway. A British special forces mission which involved the 1st and 2nd Special Air Service Regiments acting in support of the advance of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery's Allied 21st Army Group in operations Varsity and Plunder, this crossing of the Rhine was one of the largest and most diverse operations ever carried out by the SAS.

In this offensive, the SAS teams were thrust deep into German territory, often having to battle their way through the enemy lines to get back to safety. ‘I quickly learned that there was no way to control an SAS battle,’ Wellsted wrote of his first major encounter in charge of a patrol. ‘The din was deafening – seventy odd Vickers and half a dozen Brownings all chattering together. The screech of ricochets and the fire of the enemy made my voice sound like the squeak of a mouse against a church organ. I was helpless.’

In one of these encounters, as the war was drawing to a close, Wellsted’s troop found itself surrounded. In the ensuing firefight, Wellsted was wounded, bringing his active front line career to an end.
39.95 In Stock
With the SAS: Across the Rhine: Into the Heart of Hitler's Third Reich

With the SAS: Across the Rhine: Into the Heart of Hitler's Third Reich

by Ian Wellsted
With the SAS: Across the Rhine: Into the Heart of Hitler's Third Reich

With the SAS: Across the Rhine: Into the Heart of Hitler's Third Reich

by Ian Wellsted

Hardcover

$39.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

With the SAS: Across the Rhine is the story of the latter part of Captain Ian Wellsted’s military career with the Special Air Service, the first part of which was detailed in his well-received SAS: With the Maquis. This is a very personal account, revealing the many emotional as well as physical strains placed upon men in the fighting line.

The author takes us back to his time employed with the 79th armored Division (the famous ‘Hobart’s Funnies’) preparing for D-Day and his desire for more exciting action, which led first to the Parachute Regiment and then the SAS. Whilst we learn a little of his time with the maquis, the main focus of the story is his part in Operation Archway. A British special forces mission which involved the 1st and 2nd Special Air Service Regiments acting in support of the advance of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery's Allied 21st Army Group in operations Varsity and Plunder, this crossing of the Rhine was one of the largest and most diverse operations ever carried out by the SAS.

In this offensive, the SAS teams were thrust deep into German territory, often having to battle their way through the enemy lines to get back to safety. ‘I quickly learned that there was no way to control an SAS battle,’ Wellsted wrote of his first major encounter in charge of a patrol. ‘The din was deafening – seventy odd Vickers and half a dozen Brownings all chattering together. The screech of ricochets and the fire of the enemy made my voice sound like the squeak of a mouse against a church organ. I was helpless.’

In one of these encounters, as the war was drawing to a close, Wellsted’s troop found itself surrounded. In the ensuing firefight, Wellsted was wounded, bringing his active front line career to an end.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526745699
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Publication date: 08/17/2020
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Having served with ‘A’ Squadron, 1 SAS during 1944 and 1945, and being wounded in April 1945, after the Second World War COLONEL IAN WELLSTED OBE remained in the British Army for a further twenty-two years. He served in Palestine, Egypt, Europe and the Far East. He died in 2002, aged 83.

Table of Contents

List of Maps vii

Preface viii

Introduction x

Abbreviations and Glossary xiii

Chapter 1 Three Letters 1

Chapter 2 Down and Up 6

Chapter 3 Entr'acte 11

Chapter 4 Ecole Haute Montagne 16

Chapter 5 Ski Mountaineering 22

Chapter 6 Ski Patrol 26

Chapter 7 From the High Mountains to the Low Countries 32

Chapter 8 Before the Rhine 39

Chapter 9 Snipers' Alley 44

Chapter 10 Ostrich 49

Chapter 11 Rhade 55

Chapter 12 Raesfeld and Sudlohn 59

Chapter 13 Wullen 63

Chapter 14 Easter in Elte 68

Chapter 15 Reyes 72

Chapter 16 Across The Weser 76

Chapter 17 Schneeren 81

Chapter 18 At the Intersection 85

Chapter 19 Wounded 89

Chapter 20 The Road Back 92

Chapter 21 VE-Day 95

Chapter 22 Back to Britain 99

Chapter 23 The Liberation of Norway 102

Chapter 24 The Morvan Again 106

Epilogue 113

The SAS in The Second World War: A Perspective 117

Appendices 140

Appendix I Composition and Fate of my Troop as Reserve for Frankforce 141

Appendix II Schneeren, Order of March on 8 April 144

Appendix III Differences Between Jeeps Issued to 1st SAS 146

Bibliography 147

Index 148

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews